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Author: R M PatnaikR M Patnaik
Date: Jul 6, 2008 04:51
Indeed, I am motivated to know more about "Doctor Within". I believe,
this can be related toā teleonicsā. I first read a research paper on
teleonics authored by Dr Gyorgy Jaros of Royal Prince Alfred
Hospital,NSW Australia and Dr Elisabeth Dostal, Department of
Biomedical Engineering, University of CapeTown,SA.
The origin of teleonics goes back to computer studies in human
physiology by one of the authors and his coworkers (Cloete.A). It
became apparent that the essence of life lies in flow of matter,
energy and information (mei) rather than the material structures
present in body. In fact, processes in all living systems can really
become meaningful only when they are bound together into coherent self-
regulated systems, each directed toward a definite and identifiable
goal.The name given to such a goal related system was the āteleonā and
the wider framework in which they are discussed was called
āteleonicsā.
I think "Doctor Within" can take care of most of the body functions.
The flow of mei is controlled by a biological amplifier within the
body provided by the nature,and malfunction of this biological
amplifier leads to various ailments. Repair of this amplifier can
perhaps be done electronically. What is needed is correction of the ...
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Author: tgideastgideas
Date: Jul 5, 2008 13:42
FYI - TG Ideas LLC has recently launched a new blog "Interfacing with
the Doctor Within" - http://doctor-within.blogspot.com/
There seems to be a "Doctor Within" that takes care of most of the
body functions, with or without our help or the help of a medical
professional. Sometimes, however, the "Doctor Within" might need help
from the outside to complete the body repairs. Currently we only
"look in" to fix the health problem by our medical tests, etc. We
don't āaskā the "Doctor Within" what it needs to fix itself. This new
blog lays the foundation for better accessing and investigating the
"Doctor Within", perhaps by electronic means.
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Author: draviedravie
Date: Jul 5, 2008 04:20
The use of wireless devices has become very common in many companies
and homes in recent years. Bluetooth ⢠connected computer
peripherals,
cell phones, wireless LAN links and cordless phones all depend upon
antennas to make a connection. Often the antenna is inside the device
and is invisible, but if an external antenna is used, perhaps to
increase the range of the connection, it needs a cable to connect it
to the device. Both antennas and their feeder cables are prone to
damage. This is particularly true if any part of the system is
located
outdoors. Fault finding these systems can be more difficult than say
testing a DC system like an electric door bell. This is because the
loss of the cable varies with frequency. It may be perfectly
connected
when tested with an ohmmeter, but still show a high loss when
transmitting power at a frequency of Gigahertz or two, like some of
the systems mentioned above. Measurement of the match of the antenna
and the cable loss are part of the answer. This article explains what
is involved, and how they are measured with a dual directional
coupler. ...
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Author: Sheik YerbhoutiSheik Yerbhouti
Date: Jul 5, 2008 03:16
Snapper y7mail.com.invalid> writes:
>I have had my second thumbdrive fail. It's a 1 gig Imation. It started with
>files in folders becoming corrupted. ie. one folder had a lot of stuff in it and
>these weird files appearing. and Explorer cannot delete them either.
>So I formatted the drive and copied the data back onto it from backups. Then
>other problems appeared, all file related.
>So I must assume that the unit's stuffed.
>The likes of Harvey Norman have barrells of thumbdrives of various sizes and
>brands in the bargain bins as you walk in the door. Just wondering if any brands
>stick out whether for good reasons or for bad.
Stick with SanDisk. I use an 8 GB one without a problem. The shit ones
break, had very bad device driver support, and will make Windows crash and
burn without warning.
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Author: Rob BergerRob Berger
Date: Jul 3, 2008 09:57
Hello all
I am currently looking for an external quarzoscillator that can be used
to clock a chip. The chip has a SMA socket, so I would need in some way
an oscialltor that could be connected to this SMA socket. The frequency
I am looking for is 5-10 MHz. Would be thankful if someone could point
me out where to get such a device
Thanks
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Author: bathezgbathezg
Date: Jul 3, 2008 01:24
hi?
I am trying to synchronize a generator to an infinite bus band, but am
defeated to design the correct circuitory for use.
help to synchronize a 3 phase motor using a digital sysnchroscope.
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Author: wernadowernado
Date: Jul 1, 2008 04:09
Strategic Cooperation in Nano Micro Material Processing and
Perforation Technology
IPM
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3 Comments |
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